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  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 3
    Citation - Scopus: 3
    Physical and Biological Characteristics of Electrospun Poly (vinyl Alcohol) and Reduced Graphene Oxide Nanofibrous Structure
    (Taylor & Francis Ltd, 2024) Sasmazel, Hilal Turkoglu; Alazzawi, Marwa; Gozutok, Melike; Sadhu, Veera; Turkoglu Sasmazel, Hilal
    The fabrication of graphene-based nanocomposites has been a topic of increasing interest due to graphene's exceptional physical properties and the ability to enhance the properties of various polymeric materials. Evaluating the biocompatibility of these nanocomposites is crucial to ensure their safe and effective use in biomedical applications. This study characterized and assessed the biocompatibility of previously fabricated electrospun polyvinyl alcohol (PVA)/reduced graphene oxide rGO fibrous structures by conducting a comprehensive assessment of their physical and biological characteristics. Contact angle measurements revealed that adding rGO to electrospun PVA fibers enhanced the surface wettability, improving the fibrous structure's PBS absorption capacity and degradation behavior. Including the rGO content resulted in a higher water vapor transmission rate, reaching similar to 48 g/m2day for PVA + 0.5 wt.% rGO and similar to 45 g/m2day for PVA + 1.0 wt.% rGO, compared to similar to 40 g/m2day for electrospun PVA fibers. Cell culture studies, including MTT assay, alkaline phosphatase (ALP) activity analysis, alizarin red staining, fluorescence microscopy, and SEM analyses, demonstrated that electrospun PVA + 1.0 wt.% rGO nanocomposites exhibited superior cell viability, proliferation, and growth compared to other samples, due to the improved physical properties of the PVA + 1.0 wt.% rGO fibrous structure.
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 21
    Citation - Scopus: 18
    Dbd Atmospheric Plasma-Modified, Electrospun, Layer-By Polymeric Scaffolds for L929 Fibroblast Cell Cultivation
    (Taylor & Francis Ltd, 2016) Surucu, Seda; Sasmazel, Hilal Turkoglu; Turkoglu Sasmazel, Hilal
    This paper reported a study related to atmospheric pressure dielectric barrier discharge (DBD) Ar+O-2 and Ar+N-2 plasma modifications to alter surface properties of 3D PCL/Chitosan/PCL layer-by-layer hybrid scaffolds and to improve mouse fibroblast (L929 ATCC CCL-1) cell attachment, proliferation, and growth. The scaffolds were fabricated using electrospinning technique and each layer was electrospun sequentially on top of the other. The surface modifications were performed with an atmospheric pressure DBD plasma under different gas flow rates (50, 60, 70, 80, 90, and 100sccm) and for different modification times (0.5-7min), and then the chemical and topographical characterizations of the modified samples were done by contact angle (CA) measurements, scanning electron microscopy (SEM), atomic force microscopy, and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. The samples modified with Ar+O-2 plasma for 1min under 70cm(3)/min O-2 flow rate (71.077 degrees +/- 3.578) showed a 18.83% decrease compare to unmodified samples' CA value (84.463 degrees +/- 3.864). Comparing with unmodified samples, the average fiber diameter values for plasma-modified samples by Ar+O-2 (1min 70sccm) and Ar+N-2 (40s 70sccm) increased 40.756 and 54.295%, respectively. Additionally, the average inter-fiber pore size values exhibited decrease of 37.699 and 48.463% for the same Ar+O-2 and Ar+N-2 plasma-modified samples, respectively, compare to unmodified samples. Biocompatibility performance was determined with MTT assay, fluorescence, Giemsa, and confocal imaging as well as SEM. The results showed that Ar+O-2-based plasma modification increased the hydrophilicity and oxygen functionality of the surface, thus affecting the cell viability and proliferation on/within scaffolds.